| Literature DB >> 34220636 |
Diego Navarro-Mateu1, Teresa Gómez-Domínguez1, María Padrós Cuxart2, Esther Roca-Campos3.
Abstract
Across Europe, the enrolment of students with special educational needs in regular classrooms is increasing, although it does not always mean access to high quality educational experience. In this context, inclusive education has been enhanced in most educational systems, but its successful implementation is still limited and has become a challenge in most countries, and specially in secondary education, when segregation due to learning achievement is more frequent. Educational practices that take into account the potential of promoting learning interactions within heterogeneous groups of students have already demonstrated contributing to educational inclusion of students with special needs. In this study we analyse the case of a secondary education school located in Valencian Community (Spain), which educates students with special needs along with their typically developing peers and is characterized by its inclusive ethos. The analysis focuses on three educational strategies implemented in the school and their impact on educational improvement and inclusion of the students with special needs: (1) co-teaching, (2) interactive groups, (3) dialogic literary gatherings. Qualitative data were obtained from communicative focus groups with teachers, communicative life stories with students and relatives, communicative observations of the three educational strategies and documentary analysis. The findings show significant increase in the students' instrumental learning, as well as an improvement in these students' overall inclusion in the school.Entities:
Keywords: dialogue; inclusive classrooms; inclusive education; instrumental learning; interaction; secondary schools; special educational needs; students with special needs
Year: 2021 PMID: 34220636 PMCID: PMC8244900 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.662650
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Children with developmental disabilities participants in the research de 2018 a 2021.
| Hyperactivity disorder | 10 |
| Moebius syndrome | 1 |
| Motor disability | 1 |
| Visual disability | 1 |
| Intellectual disability | 7 |
| Autism spectrum disorder | 11 |
| Turner syndrome | 1 |
Data collection instruments.
| Communicative focus groups (CFGs) | 2 with management team and head of counseling department (total 3 participants each CFG) |
| Life stories (LSs) | 2 mothers of students with special needs |
| Communicative observations (CO) | Students with special needs |
| Documentary research (DR) | Reports of the school not available in the public domain |
Description of analysis categories.
| Learning outcomes | What results do students with special needs achieve and what is their academic progression. |
| Quality of learning interactions | To what extent do students with special needs participate in learning activities and content with typically developing students. |
| Quality of social relations | If there is a relationship of help, friendship, solidarity with the students with special needs. |
| Attitudes and beliefs toward special needs' students | To what extent there is a transformation in the outlook and expectations toward students with special needs. |
| Adaptive behavior and self-regulation | Participation of students with special needs in classroom routines with typically developing students. |
| Impact on the teaching role | There is a change in teaching staff, organization, and beliefs toward the inclusion of students with special needs. |